Hello,
I would like to know if an oboe can be marched. Some of my friend say its not possible, but i don;t believe that...and then one of my band directors told me i should play clarinet....but why play clarinet when i know how to play oboe and gonna be playing it during the concert season anyways...and i also heard its not good to focus on two instruments when you are an oboist....so i pose the questions again....is it possible to march an oboe? has anyone ever done it, or saw someone who did? and is it really that streneous?

oboes can march we had one in my band a little while back, and it is very hard. Torus posted reasons about why they should not, and they are very valid reasons. most obvious are hte fact, you must roll step or break a reed, and they aren't cheap. try searching the forum under "why oboes do not march". you can try and march, and it isn't harmful to learn another instrument either. hope this helps.

oboes can march and if you really want to do it go for it but the reed thing would be a problem. it could also be nice to learn a different instrument, if you are really into music band directors love having kids that can play more than one instrument and it looks good on college applications if thats a direction you are considering but really the decision is up to you and your director

Here are the previously posted reasons why it's a bad idea to march with an oboe in your hand:

1. The instrument is too delicate.
2. It would be impossible to maintain the appropriate embouchure and march.
3. The reeds are too fragile and expensive to replace.
4. They would never be heard.
5. If they were heard, you'd wish they weren't.
6. It's too hard to learn to play the oboe correctly to adulterate your technique with bad habits acquired from trying to play that loudly.
7. There are usually no oboe parts to marching band show tunes.
8. Oboes cannot play that sharp.
9. Oboists as a general rule are fussy, perfectionist primadonnas who would rather cut out their own teeth than pollute their instruments with tunes like "Gimme Some Lovin'", "Louie, Louie" or any type of fight song.

Many years ago I used to play oboe in marching band, but it was really impossible: I didn't know where to put sheet music to read, my sound was one of the worst sounds I ever heard, fortunately I never broke reeds.
Once I tried to play it in a march in Autumn, when temperature was not so high (+10°C) and after 2 minutes I was playing I decided to stop play and simulate!!
Right now I play oboe only in concerts, and during march I only practise in my oboe or in bassoon.

some years ago when I was in China, I saw there were several oboes in a Chinese military band during an open ground show. There were bassoons marching too. Of course, I could not hear the sound of those oboes and bassoons amongst the flutes and other brass instruments.

Another thing, when I think about trying to maintain the appropriate air support to play the oboe and march around at the same time in a hot uniform... horrors. The paramedics really have better things to do with their time than resucitate oboists who were too thick-headed to not march with another instrument.

I disagree with you Melvin, it is a good thing to double when you are an oboe player. I play the alto sax in marching band, and it has vastly improved my oboe playing. Just make sure you have enough time to double.

it is possible to march an oboe, however it is not at all good for the instrument or for you. i also play oboe and am in marching band, and i wondered why i had to switch instruments. its a pain. however, if you switch to clarinet or flute, it will mess with your embouchure as well as confuse you with fingerings. my director suggested i switch to playing a mellophone, a brass instrument, which will not mess with memorizing fingerings/ confuse you and it won't hurt your embouchure at all. switching to brass is really hard, as i am finding out, but playing percussion would be easier. basically, do what your director needs for your marching band, and come to grips with the fact that you can't march your best friend (aka the oboe).